Background
Kazimierz Roman Debicki was born on January 20, 1896, in Sambor, Austro-Hungary (nowadays Poland).
238 King St, Hammersmith, London W6 0RF, UK
Polish University Abroad at London
Carnegieplein 2, 2517 KJ Den Haag, Netherlands
Academy of International Law at Hague
3700 O St NW, Washington, DC 20057, USA
Georgetown University
Kazimierz Roman Debicki was born on January 20, 1896, in Sambor, Austro-Hungary (nowadays Poland).
Debicki earned his Master of Laws degree from Jan Casimir University in Poland, and his doctoral degree from the Polish University Abroad (London), and also studied at the Academy of International Law at Hague.
Debicki began his career in the Polish foreign service in 1919, initially as a contract agent in the Polish delegation in Vienna, then as an attaché with the title of secretary in the Delegation of the Republic of Poland and later in the legation in Budapest and secretary of the Polish Parliament in Brussels. From October 1, 1927 to October 1, 1933, he was the counselor and then the director of the office of the minister of foreign affairs.
On May 16, 1935, he was appointed as extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to the government of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in Belgrade , and after the attack of the Third Reich on Yugoslavia on April 6, 1941 left with the staff of the Belgrade mission, from August 10, 1941 to August 30, 1942 continue the mission of the government of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in exile in Cairo and London. From October 1942 to July 5, 1945, he was an envoy in Havana with the territorial scope of the institution including: Cuba, Dominican Republic and Haiti.
In 1949, Dobicki became a professor of political science at Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. He retired from that institution as an emeritus professor in 1964.
During World War I, Debicki also served in the Austro-Hungarian Army in 1915-1917, reaching the rank of artillery lieutenant.